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Very Little Helps => Stores => Topic started by: Noyouwont on 09-10-20, 10:03AM

Title: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Noyouwont on 09-10-20, 10:03AM
Hi.
As Boxing day falls on a Saturday, and the Monday after is now a bank holiday.
Can you be forced to work the Saturday if contracted (Boxing day)

I didn't think Tesco would make people work this, but we are being told we have to work if Saturday is our contracted day.

Any info please.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: dairyfresh on 09-10-20, 10:26AM
Last I heard tesco was keeping saturday as the bank holiday
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 09-10-20, 12:30PM
Yes boxing day is a saturday bank holiday.  You can't be forced to work any of the christmas and new year bank holidays though, so just request it off at your seasonal working arrangements meeting. Or submit a holiday form.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: oldfashionedplayer on 09-10-20, 01:00PM
As per holiday policy you can request it off, either as paid, unpaid or work a different day but Christmas day and boxing day you don't have to work at all. Regardless of day or night staff.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lucgeo on 09-10-20, 01:50PM
Read your contract and highlight where it reads NO colleague need work Xmas day, Boxing Day or New Year's Day...unless the contracts have been changed on the QT  ???
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Daredevil on 09-10-20, 05:26PM
It looks like Tesco are classing Saturday as a BH.Official hol on gov.uk is the 28th! Can Tesco change it to suit themselves?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: expressman77 on 09-10-20, 08:14PM
If tesco class mon  as Bank holiday then the Saturday  is a normal working day.
But all holiday and bank holiday time off should have been requested by now.
If you havnt requested any of the dates off then you should be working
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: oldfashionedplayer on 10-10-20, 03:10AM
Here's better clarification to save you all going on about tesco changing days from this to that, generally nights can vote on it but your supposed to be a part of that and be closer to the time of which to class as the day for people to have off, but you can take any.

QuoteStores and Customer Fulfilment Centres

If you joined Tesco before 26th January 2009, working on
a bank holiday is voluntary unless your contract specifically
requires you to do so.
If you joined on or after 26th January 2009 and there are
insufficient volunteers to work on a bank holiday, you may
be required to work on up to five bank holidays (excluding

-Internal, Holiday, Version 3.2, Page 7 of 10 â€" February 2020

Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day) if you
are normally scheduled to work on the day the bank holiday
falls. Colleagues in Scotland do not have to work on 2nd
January if they don’t want to.

If you’re on a flexi contract, it is your choice to work any
flexi hours on a bank holiday.
If you don’t have a fixed working pattern, you will be treated
as if you are scheduled to work on the bank holiday.
However, it will still be your choice whether to work the day
or not, and a day will be deducted from your bank holiday
allowance if you don’t work.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: extrastore on 21-10-20, 02:12PM
What days are the store closed this Xmas Newyear please
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: whatajoke2019 on 21-10-20, 05:44PM
Christmas Day falls on a Friday this year-so for the majority of larger stores we won't then close again until Easter Sunday-in England, anway.

Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 22-10-20, 01:50PM
Quote from: extrastore on 21-10-20, 02:12PM
What days are the store closed this Xmas Newyear please
Closed for customers. Christmas Day.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lucgeo on 22-10-20, 01:57PM
The stores can only open if they have enough staff...Boxing Day and New Year's Day are staff voluntary working days...so if no one volunteers/agrees to work ??? But you always get the few who balls it up for everyone else  :-X
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Halftone84 on 23-10-20, 01:29PM
I asked my sm about this 3 weeks ago and have heard nothing back.  She wasn't sure what day Tesco class as the bank holiday.

I booked the Monday as that's the bank holiday on the gov.uk site, but would rather the boxing day off as my regular shift is close Thursday, day off Friday, early Saturday, giving me no extra time off whatsoever.

Nobody in this post has actually clarified anything though.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: 80377494 on 23-10-20, 03:17PM
Unless you work nights, the bank holidays in England this year are Xmas Day, Boxing Day (Saturday 26/12/20) and New Years Day. All wages clerks, store managers and Stock & Admin managers were given this information in March.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Scruff on 23-10-20, 07:33PM
what are the bank holidays for nights then?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: 80377494 on 23-10-20, 07:47PM
Nights are usually given a choice of 2 out of 3 possible options.  Xmas Eve into Xmas Day, Xmas Day into Boxing Day or Boxing Day in to Sunday 27th. The decision will have been made in your store earlier in the year
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: bornfree on 19-11-20, 06:50PM
Am I right in thinking that nobody can be forced to work Boxing Day? Our night team are being told they have to work Boxing Day and not Xmas eve. I thought they were supposed to be consulted about their preference. Can anyone tell me if this is in writing anywhere? Thank you!
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: oldfashionedplayer on 19-11-20, 09:15PM
If you work nights you will have a designated 24 hour period which will replace the actual bank holiday. This starts at 12 noon on the day before the bank holiday, or 12 noon on the day of the bank holiday. This will be agreed following consultation with your management team, union representatives, and members of the night team. 

https://colleague-help.ourtesco.com/hc/en-us/articles/115005206226-Holiday-Non-Work-Pay-locations-What-named-bank-holidays-am-I-entitled-to-

Never gets consulted with us, it's apparently talked about in april though is what we are told, however we always challenge it as in your terms and conditions it still says its a bank holiday and can't be forced so if you wanna take it there refer back to your terms and conditions, as you are supposed to be a part of the voting process (which never happens)

also refer to holiday policy - Page 7 and 8 out 10

Stores and Customer Fulfilment Centres
If you joined Tesco before 26th January 2009, working on
a bank holiday is voluntary unless your contract specifically
requires you to do so.
If you joined on or after 26th January 2009 and there are
insufficient volunteers to work on a bank holiday, you may
be required to work on up to five bank holidays (excluding Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day) if you
are normally scheduled to work on the day the bank holiday
falls. Colleagues in Scotland do not have to work on 2nd
January if they don’t want to.
If you’re on a flexi contract, it is your choice to work any
flexi hours on a bank holiday.
If you don’t have a fixed working pattern, you will be treated
as if you are scheduled to work on the bank holiday.
However, it will still be your choice whether to work the day
or not, and a day will be deducted from your bank holiday
allowance if you don’t work.

So use whichever you want, there's plenty to use against them, and the option of using a holiday, unpaid or working a different day is also a reasonable request from you :)
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: bornfree on 19-11-20, 11:49PM
Thank you oldfashionedplayer. This is exactly the info I was hoping for!
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: bornfree on 20-11-20, 09:17AM
Sorry, me again! So if 'they' have decided, without consulting nights, that Boxing Day starts at noon on Christmas Day and ends at noon on Boxing Day, can the night shift be forced to work Boxing night (ie Saturday 26th) because that isn't deemed to be Boxing day anymore or does the lack of consultation mean this can be overturned?  Hope this makes sense. Trying to get my arguments ready!
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: trotter on 20-11-20, 09:54AM
Hi all, newbie here.

Just joined Tesco as temp night worker and as a bit of Luddite cannot find where to start new topic on here...is it because I'm a newbie maybe?

My shifts are Friday, Saturday and Sundays. So with Christmas Day falling on a Friday would I be expected to do my night shift that night for Boxing Day opening?

TIA

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Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Welshie on 20-11-20, 05:45PM
Hi Trotter , yes you would definitely be expected to work boxing night . As a new xmas temp , you'll also  be expected to work xmas night and new years night .  At the risk of sounding rude it's a xmas job , expect to work xmas . You'll also be asked to work xmas eve and new years eve .
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: VladPutin on 20-11-20, 06:35PM
Ladies and gentlemen, it is 2020, remember.

Quick phone call to the DM informing him you've been coughing for the last hour or so and have a fever, and you can have both Xmas and New Year's off! >:D
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: oldfashionedplayer on 21-11-20, 01:43AM
that's true vlad, and spend it with family, just don't go shopping in a tesco store near you lol.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: grim up north on 21-11-20, 04:22PM
Not really Vlad. You'll be expected to have a test if you have symptoms. They aren't as hard to get either as the media like to play out
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Raindrop85 on 21-11-20, 04:25PM
Along the same line......If the policy is that we don’t have to work Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year’s Day then for night workers it’s usuallly the night before I.e Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve, I never used to have to book this on a holiday form, until Last year, so this year when booking all of my holidays I included them three days, only the thing now is that I have been told by a (dishonest) manager is that I can’t have those days as there are “already too many people off”  yet company policy as well as our contracts state different.... is it me or do some managers like to try and manipulate company policy for their own benefit or their “favourites”. Needless to say I won’t be attending those shifts as I have not for the last few years I have been working for the company. I have made that clear to the other managers.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: VladPutin on 21-11-20, 07:20PM
Quote from: grim up north on 21-11-20, 04:22PM
Not really Vlad. You'll be expected to have a test if you have symptoms. They aren't as hard to get either as the media like to play out

True, but you can't be disciplined for taking the time off while waiting for the test results. Bloke I know was off nearly a week. Test came back negative but management couldn't touch him. ;)
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: trotter on 04-12-20, 02:25AM
So I have worked 8 night shifts now as a temp and curious as to why there is a night shift Xmas Day night if the store has been closed that day. Surely the shelves/store etc will be as they were when the Xmas Eve shift had finished at 7.00am on Xmas Day morning. Could anybody please advise?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Cinderella on 04-12-20, 04:41PM
In my store, there are people in on Christmas Day filling. There is never a day the store is completely empty of staff! Usually it depends on your role, for instance checkout staff aren’t needed on Christmas Day, so they have a day of their holiday entitlement used. Staff filling the shelves may still have shifts, if they haven’t requested the day as holiday. I’ve even seen a situation where a checkout staff member insisted they didn’t want Christmas Day as holiday and went in to help with filling, and sorting putbacks and so on.

Others may know more than me, but it’s possible you may have a shift. Talk to your line manager if you’re unsure, or unable to attend.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Welshie on 04-12-20, 07:29PM
Xmas eve nightshift is usually 5pm -midnight and is mostly focused on ambient fill , xmas night nightshift is 10pm-7am and is mostly fresh fill . It has usually very few staff and its mostly the xmas temps .
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: BoyBlunder on 05-12-20, 12:49AM
Hi, I think this is the place to ask this.

I’m a pretty new flexi temp night staff at a larger store, with my one contracted shift being Sunday night 10pm-7am. Am I allowed to refuse to working Boxing Day and New Years Day if they try to force me to as they are Saturday night shifts? I’m completely open to actually working Christmas Eve and Boxing Day in return to have New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day off, but I have a horrible feeling going off of other long-term colleague’s comments that they’re going to try make me work Christmas Eve, Boxing Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. Likewise, am I allowed to refuse to work Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve shifts since I’m not contracted those days but am a flexi contract?

I haven’t had a meeting about my Christmas rota yet which is worrying, and I would just like to know what I can and can’t do/what I am an am not entitled to going into it, as other colleagues have said that they didn’t know the rules around it and signed confirming their shifts and being told this information afterwards.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Cbatt566 on 05-12-20, 01:12AM
I started temping a month ago on nights in PFS (sat and sun) I told them when I joined I am by no means working Christmas 26th and 27th and 2nd/ 3rd Jan. I don’t need this job I am just doing it for extra cash/savings my night manager just said we will close the PFS for the nights and get whatever holiday I am entitled to... LOL 😂
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Nomad on 05-12-20, 11:04AM
Any temp staff dreaming/hoping of becoming a permanent member of staff consider your responses and attitude to be asked to work very carefully.

I am not saying you should lick their boots to get it though.  I would encourage sticking up for your rights once you are in with a few months work under your belt.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: gomezz on 05-12-20, 06:04PM
Whenever I am asked to work extra or different shifts I always make it sound as though I am doing them a favour even if it is something which suits me.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: BoyBlunder on 05-12-20, 09:11PM
Quote from: Nomad on 05-12-20, 11:04AM
Any temp staff dreaming/hoping of becoming a permanent member of staff consider your responses and attitude to be asked to work very carefully.

I am not saying you should lick their boots to get it though.  I would encourage sticking up for your rights once you are in with a few months work under your belt.

I really am not bothered about staying in this role, to be fair. I transferred stores and the management here make it unbearable to the point that the employee turn over is crazy high. I’d just rather stick up for my rights and if that’s why I’m not kept on then so be it. However, I’ve been informed by a shift leader that they have personally made it so I’m extremely likely to be kept on as they want me to be trained in PI as I have some previous experience from my past job, and it seems they don’t want to upset that shift leader as they seem to be essential to the night shifts as they’re the only one that truly knows how to do certain tasks.

Saying that, as a flexi temp, am I allowed to refuse to work Boxing Day and New Year’s Day if they aren’t my contracted shifts, or alternatively Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve since they still aren’t Sunday’s this year?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Nomad on 05-12-20, 09:30PM
Most companies run on 'old flannel', all I say is play their game to suit you.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Welshie on 06-12-20, 12:07AM
Boy blunder , you have the rite to refuse any shift and that's fine if you're not bothered about being kept on . For others that do want to be kept on , I would suggest you decide which nights you would like off to spend with your family and negotiate, if you have young kids it might be important to have xmas eve at home , so tell them you'll work boxing night and new years eve etc . 
Many of our xmas temps last year finished on xmas eve , I think it will be different this year because of covid but being made permanent is not a sure thing .
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: NightAndDay on 06-12-20, 11:56AM
Does working christmas day pay more than time and a quarter, I know Sainsburys pays triple time for working on christmas day, if they don't then I can't see why anyone would choose to work it  (the contract says christmas day is one of those days people can't be forced to work.)
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Newbie20 on 24-12-20, 12:19AM
Boxing day falls on a Saturday which is my normal working day, I haven't booked it as a holiday and have chosen to work it. Does this mean I should request overtime on the new work & pay system and should I get another day back as holiday? Thanks.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: oldfashionedplayer on 24-12-20, 07:50AM
Quote from: NightAndDay on 06-12-20, 11:56AM
Does working christmas day pay more than time and a quarter, I know Sainsburys pays triple time for working on christmas day, if they don't then I can't see why anyone would choose to work it  (the contract says christmas day is one of those days people can't be forced to work.)

Time and quarter for tesco, used to be time and half / double time for the long servers, so just not worth it to be honest
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Cairney39 on 24-12-20, 03:13PM
Newbie20 your holiday entitlement as a hourly paid colleague on work and pay is now in hours. If you have volunteered to work Boxing Day, then you will only use some of your entitlement if you have volunteered to work less than your contracted hours. If you work the same, or more, hours than your Saturday contract, then you will use zero of your holiday entitlement. You won’t “get a day back” as you put it, but you will be able to use your holiday entitlement elsewhere depending on what you have left.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Newbie20 on 25-12-20, 10:12PM
Thank you Cairney, that was helpful  :thumbup:
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: manbearpig on 25-12-20, 10:23PM
Are Tesco counting Saturday 26th as a bank holiday or the Monday 28th as a bank holiday? Or both?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: whatajoke2019 on 25-12-20, 10:44PM
My understanding is that T are treating Saturday as Bank Holiday and the Monday (in lieu) is just a 'normal' day.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: dfl on 27-12-20, 09:33AM
surely if the uk boxing day saturday is no substituted to saturday (this can be found to be the case on many websites with a quick google) then surely if you want it off your off regardless of booking it or not, I personally never got any holiday meeting with a manager to discuss these this year and may have used all my entitlement (however Saturday is NOT a normal shift for me anyway, im monday to friday contracted non flexi), and according to my google search Saturday Boxing day bank holiday is now Monday following as a substitute
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: dfl on 27-12-20, 10:15AM
Correcting my own post, first sentence should read "saturday is now substituted to monday"
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Cairney39 on 27-12-20, 01:50PM
I’m sorry you never had a holiday meeting with your manager, however this does not change the fact that the observed “Volunteers only” day shift  Bank Holiday for Tesco workers in stores are Fri 25th and Sat 26th, then Fri 1st and Sat 2nd (Scotland only)
If you are contracted to work in stores Mon-Fri then this week you will be expected to work from Mon 28th until Thursday 31st, taking Friday 1st off unless you have volunteered to work.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Welshie on 27-12-20, 01:55PM
Dfl , Tesco choose the bank holidays as they're open 7 days a week , its banks , solicitors etc that will take the Monday.   All holidays have to be booked even if it's a bank holiday you still have to book it if you want it .
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: dfl on 27-12-20, 04:39PM
Quote from: Welshie on 27-12-20, 01:55PM
Dfl , Tesco choose the bank holidays as they're open 7 days a week , its banks , solicitors etc that will take the Monday.   All holidays have to be booked even if it's a bank holiday you still have to book it if you want it .

Would that not infer that if i booked tried to book the national bank holiday (the monday substitute) they could have refused it and said "no our bank holiday this year is the saturday) even tho i dont work saturdays
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 27-12-20, 04:56PM
If you wanted the Monday off its just treated like a normal holiday request, as its not a bank holiday.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lackofinterest on 27-12-20, 08:42PM
if a bank holiday falls on your day off then you are entitled to a days holiday in lieu which is classed as a bank holiday. if you want the monday off your manager shouldn't be able to refuse it as you're entitled to 2 bank holidays and 2 days off that week. a decent manager would never refuse you taking it.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 27-12-20, 10:37PM
What about 2,3 and 4 day workers? Does that apply to them too?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lackofinterest on 27-12-20, 11:20PM
yes. if a bank holiday falls on one of your non contracted days. you are entitled to take another days holiday irrespective of how many days you work. you will need to speak with your manager or if no joy then a union rep
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Welshie on 28-12-20, 12:09AM
Not strictly true , you are allocated bank holidays pro-rata if you work 4 days a week , you get 6 bh's . 5 days a week the full 8 days . Bank holidays are now allocated at the start of the holiday year , when they where worked out pro-rata by hours you had the right to take them on the week of the bank holiday but I'm not sure that is the case now if it doesn't fall on your contracted shift .
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: dfl on 28-12-20, 01:16AM
Quote from: Rad on 27-12-20, 04:56PM
If you wanted the Monday off its just treated like a normal holiday request, as its not a bank holiday.

it is a bank holiday (substitute for the Saturday), this in on official government websites (English and Scottish)
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 28-12-20, 04:08PM
It's  not a bank holiday for tesco store staff.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lackofinterest on 28-12-20, 10:18PM
it is if you make it one
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lackofinterest on 28-12-20, 10:21PM
tesco insisting monday is a normal day and managers forcing people to work it. why the f*** did anybody agree to work boxing day. i just don't understand it >:(
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Rad on 29-12-20, 03:07PM
This isn't news though, it was confirmed months ago. Christmas working arrangements started in October,  early November. 

Next year should be different where the holidays are moved from the Sundays to the Mondays.  Colleagues will be able to take the Sunday off as a holiday or work time back over Xmas.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: lackofinterest on 29-12-20, 03:34PM
sunday? holiday? don't you mean day off. who in their right mind works sunday? shops shouldn't even be open in my opinion
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: NightAndDay on 29-12-20, 03:37PM
Nobody does, but we're in the midsts of a race to the bottom, the higher ups need to counteract the governments attempts at narrowing the class divide. Sunday working has been the norm in the Retail industry for well over a decade, it's only in the last 5 years have they decided that Sunday workers shouldn't be paid any extra.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: Redshoes on 30-12-20, 06:25AM
Quote from: lackofinterest on 28-12-20, 10:21PM
tesco insisting monday is a normal day and managers forcing people to work it. why the f*** did anybody agree to work boxing day. i just don't understand it >:(

We are not all the same. I don't mind working new year but prefer a few days off at Christmas. I got three days this year but I have agreed to work more at new year. Others have chosen the other way round.  Christmas is not a surprise, one thing in life we can bank on, Christmas will happen. Some people don't celebrate it.
The Monday alternative bank holiday is just that. It's not an additional. It's an alternative for those places that are not open weekends. It does not mean that for this year we get Boxing Day twice. Some stores open and some don't. Some don't mind working it and others want time off. For most, Boxing Day fell on a working day so you either worked it or didn't. It should be a choice. If it fell on a normal day off you have a bank holiday day you did not need to use for this day off.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: NightAndDay on 30-12-20, 10:02AM
For the majority of Retail, Boxing day is and shall always be 26th December regardless of what day that falls on, the 28th had to be made the bank holiday alternative for boxing day for the full time workers not in Retail that have every weekend off in order for them to have the minimum required number of bank holidays available to take.

It all works out in the end, the 26th December falling on a Saturday would be the same as it falling on one of your days off during the weekday. In terms of time off everyones on an even keel. The only part which is different is that time off for Retail Workers don't consistently fall on the weekend, but that's been the case for decades and is widely accepted as part of the Retail industry.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: expressman77 on 30-12-20, 07:19PM
Quote from: lackofinterest on 28-12-20, 10:21PM
tesco insisting monday is a normal day and managers forcing people to work it. why the f*** did anybody agree to work boxing day. i just don't understand it >:(
If you dont want to work boxing day or any other bank holidays you just need to request it as a holiday when you book holidays at begining of the year
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: alaska25021 on 08-01-21, 09:42AM
Hi, I can't work out how to post on the forum so I'm having to reply, it says on my Bank Holiday Information that I've taken 1 of my bank holiday days, I only started in November and I worked both Boxing Day and New Years Day, the only bank holiday I didn't work was Christmas - would this take out a day of my Bank Holiday Information? On my Payments it says Bank Holiday Day OT which was for the hours I worked on Boxing Day which makes it seem like my bank holiday day was Boxing Day but I worked so I can't see why - so is it for Christmas day?
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: whatajoke2019 on 08-01-21, 09:49AM
I would imagine the wage clerk processed it in your store as a Bank Holiday; I'll assume the Friday (Christmas Day) was a contracted shift?

That's one thing I like about Work & Pay; I didn't have to use any of my holiday entitlement for it as you're able to move your shifts to somewhere else in the week.
Title: Re: Xmas bank holiday
Post by: alaska25021 on 08-01-21, 09:54AM
Yeah it was a contracted day - Ah I wish we used Work & Pay, working at Tesco has caused me so much anxiety so far hahaha, thank you so much!